‘Paul might have said no.’
‘To you? Never. You’re the closest thing to a dad he’s got.’
Frank held up his bandaged hand.
‘Okay, an uncle, then.’
‘Sucking up isn’t you,’ Frank said. ‘You don’t have to bother trying with me, Bucks.’
Bucks gave him a crooked smile. ‘Fine. Are we supposed to believe you manipulated credit cards and book entries on your own to the tune of ninety grand? You’re a singer. You’re not an accountant. Eve set it up, didn’t she?’
Now Frank stared into the yellow of his wine.
‘Didn’t she, Frank?’ Bucks said quietly.
‘She might’ve,’ Frank said after a moment.
‘Ah. A breakthrough,’ Bucks said. ‘But your girlfriend took off, left you holding the bag. You can pick ’em, Frank.’
‘I’ve not been lucky with women,’ Frank said. ‘Most singers aren’t.’
‘Artistic temperament,’ Bucks said. ‘Joe Vasco.’
Frank made the sign of the evil eye.
‘Am I supposed to know what that means?’ Bucks said.
‘I can’t stand Joe Vasco.’
‘You been in touch with him, huh? Wanting old friends to take over Tommy’s ops now that Paul’s pissing you off?’
‘Joe Vasco isn’t my friend,’ Frank said. ‘He’s not a friend to any friend of Tommy Bellini.’
‘Let’s be sure of that, Frank. You and Eve, you’re not on a new payroll?’
‘If I was, then I wouldn’t need to borrow ninety grand, would I?’
‘Point taken,’ Bucks said.
Frank’s Valiumed smile faded. ‘I’m going home.’
Bucks grabbed Frank’s bandaged hand, dug his nails into the stitches. Frank yelled. Wine sloshed onto the carpet. ‘You’re gonna let me know if you hear from her, right, Frank?’
‘Yes. Yes.’
‘And to build our team spirit, I’m going home with you. In case Eve calls you. Now. Go downstairs and wait for me.’
Frank set down the wineglass and staggered out, his palm cradled to his chest.
Bucks dialed a number. Listened for an answer. He had to buy precious time, and now. ‘Bad news. There’s a delay about the money,’ he said.
‘Not what I’m wanting to hear, Bucksy,’ Jose said.
‘They had a problem at the bank. Nothing serious. Eve couldn’t wire the full amounts back into the country. A temporary delay. Until Saturday.’
‘Be kidding.’
‘I’m not.’
‘Kiko’s going to be upset,’ Jose said. ‘Highly upset.’
‘That’s your problem.’
‘Man,’ Jose said, ‘that’s your problem. You just don’t know it.’ He was quiet a moment. ‘You not turning on us, are you, Bucksy? Because if you’re messing with us, we send the police that film and some buttered popcorn.’
‘You got me, I know it, okay?’ God, he hated Jose. And calling him Bucksy, like he didn’t know what he was doing, like he was a child. It made his skin crawl. ‘You’re going to get your money, I promise.’
‘Call us. Tomorrow morning.’ Jose paused. ‘With good news only.’
‘Good night,’ Bucks said. He hung up the phone. Not much time. He had to get every gun from Paul and Kiko’s sides aimed at Eve Michaels. Make sure all the blame stayed firmly on her. Point it at Eve and these two dinks that were looking for her. It didn’t matter why they really wanted to find her; he could paint them as her partners in crime.
The dinks. Why would Frank or Eve, who hated Vasco – he knew that part of the Bellini family history was true – call Vasco for help? They wouldn’t. So who were these two jerks? Guys from Kiko, testing him? Or plants from Paul? Hopefully not, hopefully just two dumbasses that Eve screwed over. But he could screw them over big time now, make them the target instead of himself, if he played out the game right. Planned his work and worked his plan, like Chad Channing’s Goal Winners! tape 3 advised.
He took a deep breath, closed his eyes, envisioned a to-do list with clean little checkmarks, the beauty of completion.
Next angle to work, go reassure Paul. Bucks roamed back to the party suites. He found Paul in one, leaning back from a worked-over plate of enchiladas and a couple of empty Shiner bottles. Hiding in beer and comfort food while Bucks did the heavy lifting. In the corner a basketball game was on, the Rockets overpowering the Jazz.
‘What happened to your eye?’ Paul asked. ‘Squeeze the wrong ass?’
‘Accident. It doesn’t hurt,’ he said. He’d break that jackass Michael/Whitman’s fingers the next time he saw him.
‘You’re not bringing me Eve’s head on a platter, or my five million,’ Paul said. ‘I’m not sure why you’re here.’
‘No, Paul, I don’t have her yet,’ Bucks said. ‘But I got an extension with Kiko. Said it was a bank problem.’
‘Good.’
‘New problem,’ Bucks said. ‘I found a couple of guys who seem extremely interested in Eve. They might be a help to us.’
‘Who?’
‘Guys were here looking for her, gave me a line about her cleaning money for them. Wanting to find her real bad.’ Bucks didn’t mention their supposed Vasco connection or that they didn’t seem to know Eve’s cell phone number because it didn’t fit into the theory he wanted to feed Paul. These two, they’re her partners, they can lead us to her,’ Bucks said. ‘But-’
‘Bucks.’ Paul stood, turned off the television, shrugged into his jacket. ‘If these guys know where she or the money’s at, rip it out of ’em. Then kill them. Do your job, man. Now.’
12
‘I had no idea you were a mafioso from Detroit,’ Whit said.
Gooch turned his van into a diner parking lot. Pie Shack, off Kirby, the lot half-full of cars. ‘Lots you don’t know, hoss.’
Whit traced his finger along the phone number he’d written on a napkin downstairs in the club before heading for the doors, suddenly afraid he’d forget it in the rushing thrill. Eve Michaels’ phone number. The combination of numbers that could open a long-confounding lock. What if this woman wasn’t his mother? What if she was?
‘Bucks can figure out we’re not real mobsters with a couple of phone calls,’ Gooch said.
‘Yes. He’s strange. Bucks looks more like he’s a corporate lackey than gang muscle,’ Whit said. ‘You pushed him too far. I saw it in his face.’
‘Because we hit a very raw nerve. He’s scared, and he’s willing to switch sides to someone who could outgun his boss. Maybe Bucks is on precarious footing. Something’s rotten in Bellini-land.’
‘Or he’s an opportunist,’ Whit said. ‘This is one great ally you pick for us, Gooch.’
‘Fate picked him, not me. Surprised you punched him.’
‘He’s between me and my mother, and he would have shot me if we hadn’t been in a busy club.’
‘He would have shot you anyway. Those rooms are soundproofed. No one would have heard over the bump-and-grind. And they’d carry you out after the club closed.’ Gooch kept his eyes on the parking lot, on cars coming in and out. ‘We weren’t followed. That means he doesn’t want the rest of Paul’s crew knowing about our chat.’
‘You spoke with authority back there, Gooch.’
‘Marine Corps. You learn how to speak properly. Hoo-rah.’
‘I don’t think so,’ Whit said. ‘You know this world, don’t you? These men. Organized crime.’
‘I watch a lot of movies.’
‘Which bear no resemblance to the real world,’ Whit said.
‘You hitting him was a smart move,’ Gooch said. ‘Act afraid of him, you’re dead. This is social Darwinism at its next-to-most advanced. Only prison is more brutal.’ Gooch glanced over at him. ‘This is a side of you I didn’t quite expect, Your Honor.’
‘This is me…’ Whit stopped.
‘What?’
‘This is me finding my mom. It’s like training your whole life for a single event, like the Olympics or the Super Bowl or the World Series, and now you can’t make a single misstep. If I screw this up…’ He could roll down the window, wad up the napkin, toss the number into the street. Go home to his dad, take care of him. Walk away from clearly serious trouble.
‘Call her,’ Gooch said quietly. ‘Tell her you’d like to see her.’
‘What if she’s not my mother, then won’t I be a fool?’ Whit said. ‘I can think of one threat to get her here, and it’s not how I want to start a new relationship.’